Method and Apparatus of Physically Moving a Portable Unit to View Composite Webpages of Different Websites

ABSTRACT

A composite webpage contains several webpages coupled together appearing as a separate image. Demarcation lines are used to isolate the boundaries of the edges of each individual webpage. The demarcation lines form block-like geometry. Each block contains one webpage. As the user moves the portable unit, the background composite webpage slides across the screen of the portable device. To the user, the background composite webpage appears stationary as if the screen of the portable unit is transparent. These features are advantageous to social websites, ease of portable device use, in the visitation of websites and email servers. This has several benefits since now relative distances and angular displacements within the plane between objects that are outside of the range of the screen of the handheld unit can be immediately be located and placed into view on the screen of a portable unit.

CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

The present U.S. patent application entitled “Method and Apparatus of Physically Moving a Portable Unit to View Composite Webpages of Different Websites” filed on Apr. 27, 2012 with Ser. No. ______ is related to the U.S. patent applications entitled “Method and Apparatus of Physically Moving a Portable Unit to View an Image of a Stationary Map” filed on Dec. 26, 2011 with Ser. No. 13/337,251, which was also co-tiled with U.S. patent application entitled “Method and Apparatus of a Marking Objects in Images Displayed on a Portable Unit” filed on Dec. 26, 2011 with Ser. No. 13/337,252 and U.S. patent application entitled “Method and Apparatus for Identifying a 3-D Object from a 2-D Display of a Portable Unit” filed on Dec. 26, 2011 with Ser. No. 13/337,253, all of which share a common inventor as the present U.S. patent application and are all incorporated herein by reference in their entireties.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Handheld units or portable devices such as cell phones, smart phones, iPads, Blackberries and Android systems offer the ability to use webpage viewing. When a user of the portable device views a webpage, the webpage can be scrolled by using a button control or a touch screen. The touch screen buttons can adjust direction of map movement and can scale the image on the screen. For example, when using the touch screen two fingers sliding toward each other decreases the scale while sliding the two fingers sliding apart magnifies the scale. Both types of control offer the same results. In addition, some of these commands can be made by speaking where an on-board voice recognition unit can interpret the voice of the user and comply. When the webpage is viewed and an item of interest may be outside of the range of the screen of the hand handheld unit, one must scale down (minimize) the screen to see this part of the webpage. However, at times, different webpages are desired to be viewed. These webpages can be on a different tab of the browser or a new http address may be needed to be typed in to get the new webpage presented on the screen of a portable device. Typically, the user spends time to get to these new pages. This invention helps to overcome this shortcoming in current portable systems for providing webpage in a new format that offer several other advantages as well.

BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

Various embodiments and aspects of the inventions will be described with reference to details discussed below, and the accompanying drawings will illustrate the various embodiments. Some diagrams are not drawn to scale. The following description and drawings are illustrative of the invention and are not to be construed as limiting the invention. Numerous specific details are described to provide a thorough understanding of various embodiments of the present invention. However, in certain instances, well-known or conventional details are not described in order to provide a concise discussion of embodiments of the present inventions.

One of the embodiments of the disclosure introduces a background template that remains stationary. The template can be formed of images, maps, webpages, or any visual feature that has a height and width dimension. A template of webpages is called a composite webpage. It is the portable unit that moves within a plane parallel to the screen of the portable unit. As the user moves the unit, images of the stationary composite webpage appear on the screen of the portable device. The user scans the stationary composite webpage presented on the screen of a moving portable unit. This has several benefits since now relative distances and angular displacements between objects that are outside of the range of the screen of the portable unit can be immediately located and placed into view on the screen of a portable unit. The unit is moved through space to a physical position that has the coordinates of distance and angle from an origin or reference point. The distance and angle are used by the system to calculate the portion of the stationary composite webpage that would be visible on the screen of the portable unit. The handheld or portable unit is like a Sliding Window which provides a view of this image of a stationary composite webpage lying in the background of the portable unit. The image on the screen of the portable unit is comprised of a number of points or pixels.

Current processors are being clocked at 1 billion cycles per second and faster. In addition, there are special purpose accelerators for video applications. The calculations for the Sliding Window mode should be able to run in real time displaying images on the screen of the portable device as the device is moved. Due to the superior performance, as the user moves the portable unit, the appropriate portion of the stationary image of the composite webpage appears on the screen. The image on the screen and the stationary composite webpage image are effectively superimposed over one another. Thus, the user assesses the relative distance between a first webpage and a second webpage of the composite webpage being displayed on the same display screen and because the user moved the portable unit to view the stationary composite webpage, the user can feel or relate to the distance because of the physical motion. And it is not only the relative distance that is available, but it's also the orientation or movement at an angle of the handheld unit that provides further information about the content of the image.

Another one of the embodiments of the disclosure introduces a way of initializing the handheld device to enter the Siding Window function. For example, a tilt and a shift of the handheld unit can indicate to the handheld unit to enter the Sliding Window mode. Another method is by voice command by stating “Sliding Window mode”. Finally, a button (on a screen or a physical one on the unit) can be depressed to enter the Sliding Window mode.

A further embodiment is to place all of ones friends' social webpage into a composite webpage. Each of the users' webpage are segregated from one another by demarcation lines or internal adges. If the cursor crosses these demarcation lines, the portable unit is actively coupled to the server activating a connection link to a corresponding website which in turn provides any update data. The composite webpage can be shared by other users and all users can move their portable devices to view the social page of another user. The users can participate into this type of interface for medical fund raisers, girl scouts, boy scouts, specific work groups, etc. These users would login and see the composite website on the screen of their portable device. As the user varied their webpage, the results propagate to all other users.

Another embodiment includes the ability to store into memory the contents of the composite website and update the contents of the composite website when the portable device is being used or even when the portable device is not being used. Only one users' memory of a portable unit is required to perform this task at a minimum. The other users can store the contents of the last meeting and when the group gets together, the one user s' portable device downloads only the missing contents to the other users in a broadcast mode. Another possible case is for each user's portable unit to update their memory during a non-busy time period until the latest version is stored. This allows the group to participate more rapidly as a team after loading of their local social website. Checks are performed between users to insure the integrity of the stored data. The composite webpage is stored into the local memory of the portable unit at the end of the session and updated in the server holding the webpage.

Another embodiment includes the user setting and positioning their favorite webpages in a composite webpage. A user may have several webpages that are of interest to view independently on a regular basis. On a portable unit, each on would require a new address. The inventive technique uses the composite website to open all webpages simultaneously and to view each different webpage by moving the device into that portion of the composite webpage. The requirement to type in the primary address would only be done once. The user could select any one of the web addresses contained in the primary composite webpage and the system within the portable unit would recognize the primary composite web address and fetch the composite webpage. The user now has access to all their favorite websites at once on the display screen.

Another embodiment is to select all the webpages of one given http::/address such as the USPTO (United States Patent and Trademark Office) web site. Different users select a few common webpage and they also preferentially select different favorite webpages on this site that may be more of an interest to them then to other practitioners. This, a composite website can be designed to selectively identify and have ready those webpages that the user accesses on a daily basis. Once the user has set up their composite website, they have all the information that they need on one display screen. By moving the device to pre-determined locations, the user can access to their favorite webpages of the USPTO website on a hand held or mobile device. Further entry of webpages address is not required.

Another embodiment is to view the results of an email server. The composite webpage includes the most recent email arranged in a clockwise or counterclockwise direction around the entry point to the composite webpage. All mails are open and the user just reads, responds, deletes, etc., the email notifications.

Another embodiment is to view a stationary three dimensional (3-D) background image by moving the handheld unit within a three dimensional (3-D) space. The composite webpage would be three dimensional and would correspond in scale to the display screen of the portable unit. The third dimensional can be viewed by moving the device perpendicular to the plane of the screen of the portable device forming a rectangular cuboid (in addition, this angle can be different than 90°). Thus, slices of the volume of the 3-D image are viewed. The user can view the composite webpage in the XY plane, XY+δ plane, XY+2 δ plane or any parallel plane.

Another embodiment is to view a three dimensional (3-D) background image by moving the background image of a movable composite webpage on the screen of a stationary portable unit. The touch screen can be used to move the image in two dimensions corresponding to the plane of the screen. The third dimension would be perpendicular or at some angle from the handheld unit within a three dimensional (3-D) space. The third dimensional can be viewed by moving the composite webpage perpendicular to the plane of the screen of the portable device, by a temperature scale or touching a transparent tail or head. Thus, slices or cross sections, of the volume of the 3-D image are viewed on the screen. The user can integrate the cross sectional images to determine the solid.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

Please note that the drawings shown in this specification may not necessarily be drawn to scale and the relative dimensions of various elements in the diagrams are depicted schematically. The inventions presented here may be embodied in many different forms and should not be construed as limited to the embodiments set forth herein. Rather, these embodiments are provided so that this disclosure will be through and complete, and will fully convey the scope of the invention to those skilled in the art. In other instances, well-known structures and functions have not been shown or described in detail to avoid unnecessarily obscuring the description of the embodiment of the invention. Like numbers refer to like elements in the diagrams.

FIG. 1 a depicts a connection between the internet and a notebook computer.

FIG. 1 b shows a block diagram representation of the connection in FIG. 1 a.

FIG. 2 a illustrates a connection between the internet and a portable device in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 2 b shows a block diagram of the portable device in FIG. 2 a in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 3 a presents a map where a large scale and a first sub-portion of the map can be viewed on the screen of a portable device depending on the scale in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 3 b presents a map of the first sub-portion that fills the full screen of a portable device at the magnified scale in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 3 c depicts the map where the same large scale and a second sub-portion of the map can be viewed on the screen of a portable device depending on the scale in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 3 d shows the map where the same large scale and a third sub-portion of the map can be viewed on the screen of a portable device depending on the scale in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 4 a illustrates the hand-held stationary device presenting the first sub-portion of the map on the screen of a portable device when the scale is magnified in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 4 b depicts the hand-held stationary device presenting the second sub-portion of the map on the screen of a portable device when the scale is magnified in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 4 c illustrates the hand-held stationary device presenting the third sub-portion of the map on the screen of a portable device when the scale is magnified in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 5 a depicts a representative map where a large scale and a first sub-scale portion of the representative map can be viewed on the screen of a portable hand held device depending on the scale in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 5 b depicts a representative map where the first sub-scale portion of the representative map is viewed on the screen of a portable hand held device at a magnified scale in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 6 a shows a sub-scale portion of the representative map of FIG. 5 a can be viewed on the screen of a portable hand held device when the scale is magnified in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 6 b illustrates a first sub-scale portion of the representative map of FIG. 5 a that can be viewed on the screen of a portable hand held device after the portable hand held device is physically moved in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 6 c shows a second sub-scale portion of the representative map of FIG. 5 a that can be viewed on the screen of a portable hand held device after the portable hand held device is physically moved in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 6 d depicts a third sub-scale portion of the representative map of FIG. 5 a that can be viewed on the screen of a portable hand held device after the portable hand held device is physically moved in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 6 e illustrates a fourth sub-scale portion of the representative map of FIG. 5 a that can be viewed on the screen of a portable hand held device after the portable hand held device is physically moved in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 6 f illustrates a fifth sub-scale portion of the representative map of FIG. 5 a that can be viewed on the screen of a portable hand held device after the portable hand held device is physically moved in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 6 g depicts a sixth sub-scale portion of the representative map of FIG. 5 a that can be viewed on the screen of a portable hand held device after the portable hand held device is physically moved in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 6 h shows a seventh sub-scale portion of the representative map of FIG. 5 a that can be viewed on the screen of a portable hand held device after the portable hand held device is physically moved in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 6 i presents an eighth sub-scale portion of the representative map of FIG. 5 a that can be viewed on the screen of a portable hand held device after the portable hand held device is physically moved in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 6 j depicts the first, fourth, sixth and eighth sub-scale portions of the representative map of FIG. 5 a that can be viewed on the screen of a portable hand held device after the portable hand held device is physically moved to these locations in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 7 a-d shows a search process to find a particular sub-portion of the representative map of FIG. 5 a that can be found on the screen of a portable hand held device after the portable hand held device is physically moved in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 8 a presents the first sub-portion of the map in FIG. 3 a that can be viewed on the screen of a portable device when the scale is magnified in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 8 b depicts the second sub-portion of the map in FIG. 3 b that can be viewed on the screen of a portable device when the scale is magnified and the portable device has been physically moved in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 8 c illustrates the third sub-portion of the map in FIG. 3 c that can be viewed on the screen of a portable device when the scale is magnified and the portable device has been physically moved in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 8 d shows the first sub-portion of the map in FIG. 3 a that can be viewed on the screen of a portable device when the scale is magnified and the portable device has been physically moved to the initial position in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 9 a presents the MEMS (Micro-electro-mechanical System) comprising an inertial guidance system in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 9 b depicts a block diagram of a handheld device including the inertial guidance system of FIG. 9 a in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 10 a illustrates the conventional map movement performed in a stationary portable device.

FIG. 10 b shows the inventive portable device movement to view a stationary map that provides a Sliding Window perspective of a map in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 11 a presents a flowchart of locating items in a map when the map is moved in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 11 b depicts an inventive flowchart locating items in a map when the device or portable unit is moved in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 12 illustrates a more detailed flowchart of the inventive portable device movement in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 13 a shows the representative map where a large scale or a first sub-scale portion of the representative map can be viewed depending on the scale on the screen of a portable hand held device with the ability to place identifiers on various sub-portions in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 13 b presents the magnified first sub-scale portion of the representative map indicating the identifiers in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 14 depicts a flowchart of the inventive portable device movement follow the identifiers in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 15 a shows a 3-D representative map where a Z-axis direction is added to the X and Y-axes to view the large scale or a first sub-scale portion of the representative map in three dimensions in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 15 b presents the progress in the positive Z-axis direction of an image show to the user in slices in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 15 c depicts the movement away from the user by showing the tail (feathers) of the arrow in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 15 d presents the movement towards from the user by showing the head (point) of the arrow in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 16 a illustrates transceivers in a local environment in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 16 b illustrates a handheld unit with transceivers in a local environment in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 16 c illustrates a handheld unit with transceivers and a processor in a local environment in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 17 shows a hand held device used in an application to avoid obstacles in attaining points in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 18 a illustrates a notebook computer in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 18 b illustrates a handheld unit in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 18 c illustrates a social webpage in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 18 d shows a social webpage scrolled to bottom of page in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 19 shows a social composite webpage in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 20 a illustrates a Cartesian coordinate system in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 20 b illustrates a 3-D perspective of a social composite website in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 20 c illustrates a list of closest friends in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 20 d illustrates a list of second level closest friends in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 21 shows a representation of the mouse, blocks, memory, and websites to create a composite website in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 22 a shows a sub-section of a representation of the mouse, blocks, memory, websites to create a composite website in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 22 b illustrates a logic table for the mouse in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 22 c illustrates a flowchart to compare the time base between memory and the website in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 23 a illustrates a sub-section of a representation of the mouse, time difference, logic, blocks, memory, websites to create a composite website in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 23 b shows a logic table for the mouse and time based system in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 23 c shows the schematic of the logic in FIG. 23 b in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 23 d shows a logic table for the mouse and time based system and their connections in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 24 illustrates a representation of the mouse, blocks, memory, websites and connectivity to create a composite website in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 25 illustrates a mixed flowchart and block diagram to update the memory of a composite website in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 26 a illustrates a user's favorite composite website in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 26 b shows a user's favorite composite website with the display screen shifted and scaled reduced in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 27 a illustrates a user's favorite USPTO composite website in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 27 b illustrates a user's email composite website in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 28 illustrates a handheld unit with transceivers, a cloud and servers in a local and distant communication network in accordance with the present invention.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

FIG. 1 a illustrates a notebook computer (or computer) with its pathways going to through the Internet to a server. The notebook computer 1-1 can wirelessly interconnect to a gateway 1-2 which along the path 1-4 connects up to the Internet 1-5. The Internet 1-5 has a connection 1-6 to a server 1-7. This path is bidirectional and allows the user of the notebook 1-1 to access the server's database for data, or to manipulate the server.

FIG. 1 b presents a more descriptive illustration of the individual components that are in FIG. 1 a. The entire system is in 1-8 which contains the notebook computer 1-17, the interface 1-21 between the computer and the Internet 1-18, the Internet itself, the interface between the Internet 1-18 and the servers, and a set of servers 0-N. The notebook 1-17 contains a keyboard 1-13 coupled to the processor by a network 1-12, a screen 1-14 coupled to the processor by interface 1-11. A communication bus 1-10 coupling the processor 1-9 to the memory 1-15 and a communication link 1-16. The communication link 1-16 couples through the bi-directional interface 1-19 and 1-20 to the Internet 1-18. The Internet can then couple to the servers 1-25 through 1-26 via the interconnect 1-24 and 1-23.

FIG. 2 a presents a portable hand-held device or a smart phone 2-1 coupled to the Gateway by 1-2. The Gateway 1-3 is coupled to the Internet 1-5 by the interface 1-4 and the Internet 1-5 is coupled to the servers 1-7 by the interface 1-6. The interconnects 1-2, 1-4 and 1-6 are bi-directional allowing the portable unit or smart phone 2-1 to access the servers 1-7 for data or for the server to present data to the smart phone 2-1. The smart phone has a display screen that currently is presenting icons of various applications (the array of rectangles).

FIG. 2 b presents a block diagram of the smart phone 2-2. The smart phone contains a processor 1-9 coupled by a bus 1-10 to a memory 1-15 and a communication link 1-16. The processor also interfaces to a keyboard 1-13 through the interface 1-12 and to a screen 1-14 by the interface 1-11. In fact, the screen can present a keyboard to the user. In addition, the processor can have other features which allow the user easier access to the device, as well as, providing additional input to the smart phone. For example, the smart phone can contain a voice recognition unit 2-3 that communicates to the processor by interface 2-3. An accelerometer or a set of accelerometers 2-4 providing directions in three dimensions can also be located within the smart phone 2-4 and coupled to the processor by interface 2-5. The touch screen 2-7 may be a sub-set of the screen 1-14 and can be sensitive to a finger touch sending the response via interface 2-6. For audio input and output response, an earphone and a speaker 2-12 can couple audio to/from the processor by 2-13 and for visual input, a camera 2-11 can provide input to the processor via interface 2-10. Lastly, the processor can couple externally through a wireless means 2-9 by the interface 2-8. Additionally there can be other features within the smart phone that may not be listed here, as for example; power supplies, batteries and other such units which are very typical of smart phones but not illustrated to simplify the complexity of the diagram.

In FIG. 3 a, the screen of a portable device is illustrated along with several features which can be displayed, for example, on a smart phone. Along the left boundary is a motion control 3-2 that can be depressed by a finger or thumb 3-3. By depressing the motion control an image or section of the map is presented on the display. When a search is performed, a magnification can be reduced to encompass more of the local area. This allows the user to view adjacent items or locations that may be of interest to the user. For example, the location searched was Bell Labs but the user notices that the Watchung Reservation and Surprise Lake are nearby. Since the user enjoys hiking, the user remembers the relative positions of these locations.

In FIG. 3 a, the motion control can be depressed to move a particular sub-image of the map of the screen 3-1 into the center. Below the motion control is a scale 3-4 with a solid pointer 3-5. The scale provides the magnification state of the display or screen. The magnification increases as the pointer moves towards to the positive symbol while the magnification decreases as the pointer moves towards the negative symbol. Depressing the plus symbol moves the pointer upwards while depressing the negative symbol moves the pointer downwards. As the pointer moves towards the plus symbol; the image in the screen 3-1 is magnified. When the pointer moves toward the negative symbol at the other end of the scale; the image in the screen 3-1 is reduced or scaled down. Thus, by using the combination of the motion control 3-2 and the scale 3-4 together, a new sub-section of the map 3-9 can be displayed in the center and scaled (for example, see FIG. 3 b).

Once the user selects a more magnified view of Bell Labs as illustrated in FIG. 3 b, the user has a sense of where the Watchung Reservation and Surprise Lake are located. The user can then use the motion control 3-2 or slide their finger on the screen in the direction of either the Watchung Reservation or Surprise Lake at a magnification associated with the bubble 3-8 (slider at position 3-7). However, it is easy to get lost as one finger scrolls the map image by touching the screen or using the motion control 3-2. When the user gets lost happens, the user reduces magnification to find out their current location (returns back to FIG. 3 a). When the pointer is at 3-5, the scale is set (as indicated by the bubble 3-6 illustrating the association of the two solid lined arrows) to provide the screen of the portable unit illustrated within the solid boundaries 3-1. As the solid pointer 3-5 is moved to and overlays the dotted pointer 3-7, the image within the dashed line boundary 3-9 is magnified to fill the full screen of 3-1; however, this magnification is not presented in FIG. 3 a to simplify the diagram. In addition, when the motion control 3-2 is simultaneously depressed by the finger 3-3, a new image is presented within the dashed screen of 3-9 showing in this case the magnified location of Bell Labs, FIG. 3 b. This new display would fill the original display screen 3-1 as depicted in FIG. 3 b. The actual scale of 3-9 being equal to the scale of 3-1 has not been illustrated in FIG. 3 a to simplify the diagram.

FIG. 3 b depicts that the size of the display in 3-9 is identical to the size of the display in 3-1. For example, if the pointer is moved from 3-5 to 3-7 (as indicated by the bubble 3-8 illustrating the association of the two dashed lined arrows), the new display would present those components within the dashed region of 3-9. From this magnified image of the map, a more detailed description of the area surrounding Bell labs is presented. Some of the roads have been identified and named. In addition, the motion control 3-2 and the scale 3-4 which currently are presented outside the boundaries of the screen of the portable unit would be transparently superimposed over the image of the map and would be located within screen of the portable unit but have not been presented in this regard in order to further simplify the diagram.

FIG. 3 b illustrates the case where the bubble 3-8 links the pointer 3-7 and to the screen of the portable unit 3-9. Note that the screen of the portable unit 3-9 has the same dimensions as the screen of the portable unit 3-1 in FIG. 3 a. The slider 3-7 occupies the same location on the scale 3-4 as in FIG. 3 a. However, the map in FIG. 3 b provides a greater detail than the dashed box 3-9 in FIG. 3 a. The dashed box 3-9 in FIG. 3 a is not shown to scale to simplify the presentation and description of FIG. 3 a.

In FIG. 3 c, the finger 3-3 is in a new position on the motion control 3-2 (therefore, a different portion of the map will be presented) and when the pointer on the scale moves from 3-5 to 3-7, the sub-region 3-10 of the map 3-1 shows the Watchung Reservation being presented in the dashed screen 3-10. As before, this new sub-region 3-10 of the map would fill the original display screen 3-1 although this is has not been illustrated to reduced complexity of FIG. 3 c. Similarly in FIG. 3 d, because the finger 3-3 is in yet a newer position on the motion control 3-2 (another portion of the map is presented) and when the pointer on the scale moves from 3-5 to 3-7, the newer sub-region 3-11 of the map 3-1 shows Surprise Lake being presented in the dashed screen 3-11. As before, this newer sub-region of the map would fill the original display screen 3-1 although this is has not been illustrated to reduced complexity of FIG. 3 d.

In FIG. 4 a, the pointer 3-7 is now a solid line the dashed line surrounding Bell Labs is also a solid line. The scale shows the pointer 3-7 related to the screen of the portable unit 4-2 by the bubble 3-8. The previous slides of FIG. 3 a-d provided the knowledge of where the Watchung Reservation and Surprise Lake are located with reference to Bell Labs. To get from Bell Labs to the Watchung Reservation while always keeping the pointer 3-7 in a constant position (same as the scale in FIG. 3 b), the following steps are followed. Again, what is actually presented on the screen of the portable unit 4-2 is equivalent to the map presented in FIG. 3 b. The remaining portions of the map 4-1 in FIG. 4 a are not in the current view. However, the user remembers that the Watchung Reservation was to the lower right. Thus, the finger 3-3 depresses the motion control 3-2 to cause the map 4-1 to move in a direction shows according to the move map arrow 4-3 to slide in this portion of the map 4-1. The display currently presents the location of Bell Labs on the screen of the portable unit 4-2. The screen of the portable unit 4-2 would appear similar to that of FIG. 3 b. In this case, the handheld stationary device 4-4 indicates that the device remains stationary while the map moves. If the map is moved in the direction of the arrow 4-3, the screen displays the map as the map is moving in the direction of the arrow 4-3 until the screen eventually presents the Watchung Reservation.

In FIG. 4 b, the screen of the portable unit 4-7 is now shown presenting the Watchung Reservation. Note that the pointer 3-7 remains at the same scale as before and has not been moved. Now the user desires to move to Surprise Lake and remembers that Surprise Lake is located to the upper right. So the finger 3-3 is placed in a corresponding location of the motion control 3-2 to move the map 4-1. This will cause the background map to move in the direction of the move map arrow 4-5. Another method of moving the map is also possible by placing the finger on the directly on the screen and moving the finger across the screen in the direction of the arrow 4-5; the map will then follow the finger. The handheld stationary device 4-4 (note that this portable unit does not move, while the map is moved) will eventually present a different portion of the map. In FIG. 4 c, this new portion of the map shows Surprise Lake which is illustrated within the screen of the portable unit 4-8.

In FIG. 5 a, one embodiment of the invention is illustrated. In this case, instead of a detailed geographical map, a simplified map providing a few features of an idealized map is presented to simplify the discussion. The motion control 3-2 is at the top left while the scale 3-4 illustrates two pointers; a solid pointer 3-5 and a dotted pointer 3-7, in the same position as before therefore providing the same scale. Beneath the scale is a new icon or identifier called the Sliding Window identifier 5-9. The pointer at 3-5 corresponds to the main display screen 5-1. The remaining background images in the map have been removed to improve the description of the invention. For example, within the screen of the portable unit 5-1, there is only a star 5-2, an oval 5-3, a shaped structure 5-4, a triangle 5-5, and a rectangle 5-6. The bubble 3-8 relates the pointer 3-7 to the screen of the portable unit 5-7 with the same scale as before. The screen of the portable unit 5-7, although it's illustrated smaller here, will have the full-size of the display of the handheld device 5-1. The portable unit is a hand held device 5-8. FIG. 5 b presents the screen of the portable unit 5-7 with the rectangle 5-6 scaled to the same size as the previous slide. Note that through the magnification process of scaling, the second screen of the portable unit 5-7 to have the same dimensions as the first screen of the portable unit 5-1, the rectangle 5-6 is also scaled appropriately. The diagonal of the screen is measured from corner 5-10 to corner 5-11.

The user can enter this Sliding Window mode several different ways. The user can tilt and a shift of the handheld unit in a certain order or sequence to initiate the handheld unit to enter the Sliding Window mode. Another possibility is to wiggle the unit a particular way, there can be a multitude of ways the unit can be moved to enter the mode. Another method is by voice command by stating “Sliding Window mode”. Using verbal commands simplifies the process of entering into the mode. Finally, a button (on a touch screen or a physical one on the unit) can be touched/depressed to enter the Sliding Window mode. This method provides an easy procedure to enter the mode. Similarly, an equivalent procedure can be used to leave the mode.

In FIG. 6 a, the screen of the portable unit 5-7 is now being held by a user's hand grasped by the thumb 6-5 and the fingers 6-1 through 6-4. The screen of the portable unit 5-7 presents a portion of the image of a stationary map 6-9 showing the rectangle 5-6. In FIG. 4 a-c, the map or image was moved while the portable unit remains stationary. The inventive embodiment in FIG. 6 uses a stationary map while the portable unit is moved. The background map in this case remains stationary as indicated by 6-9. The objects of the image of a stationary map 6-9 include: the star 5-2, the oval 5-3, the shaped structure 5-4 and the triangle 5-5. These objects are in the map but currently they are not displayed within the display of 5-17 because the physical size of the screen and the current scale (or magnification) only displays the rectangle 5-6 and its local vicinity. The screen will be located in front of the user at a confortable distance from the user's face and the origin is assigned to this location (0, 0). The origin can be mapped to a point in the image of the stationary map. The user of the portable device moves the physical device in the direction of the arrow 6-7 remembering earlier (see FIG. 5 a) that the oval was located to the upper right. The movement corresponds to 30° 6-8 as indicated within the compass 6-6. The diagram within shows the 0°, 90°, 180° and 270° marks on a circle and one referring back to the arrow 6-7 and the new angle 30° 6-8 within the compass 6-6. The image of a stationary map as indicated by 6-9. Beneath the scale 3-4 is the Sliding Window identifier 6-10 that now contains a small arrow pointing in the direction of movement and the degree relationship 30° of the arrow. Both, the compass 6-6 and identifier 6-10 would be transparent and displayed on the screen.

The origin can be assigned to any point on the image of the stationary map. The mapping can be done by touch screen, entry of the address of the location, voice command or cursor control. The origin allows the user to select a reference point which allows the user to reach this reference point quickly or conversely use the reference point to base measurements with respect to this point.

The reference angle of 0° can be set by an initialization process by placing the X-axis, for example, on the two dimensional representation of the image of the stationary map. The unit can be moved back and forth in a plane perpendicular to the user along a horizontal line, for example, to indicate where the 0°-180° line exists. Since the user is facing the screen, the software within the unit can determine where the 0° reference angle is with respect to the user which would be located to the right of the user.

The distance that the portable device moves is determined by an inertial guidance system (described later) and this distance is related to the scale of the map. The scale of the map being viewed is known by the system. This scale could be, for example, a 10 cm displacement corresponding to 100 m used by the software to generate information that instructs the inertial guidance system to adjust distance measurement such that a 10 cm displacement corresponds to 100 m. As the user moves the portable unit, the screen of the portable unit presents a moving map to the user while the image of a stationary map is presented to the portable device. Since the screen and map have the same scale, the map on the screen substantially superimposes over the map of the image of a stationary map. In other words, the map on the screen mirrors or matches that portion of the stationary map. The user can now sense or feel the distance between location on the map by experiencing the distance and angle displacement.

In FIG. 6 b, the portable device was moved until the display 5-7 presents the oval 5-3 within the display screen of the portable unit. The portable unit has been moved through a distance and direction corresponding to vector 6-11. A vector has a magnitude (distance) and direction (angle). Once the portable unit presents the oval 5-3, the unit is paused to view the image. Below the slider scale, the Sliding Window identifier 6-12 illustrates a circle indicating that the user has stopped movement of his portable device.

In FIG. 6 c, the user now moves the screen of the portable unit 5-7 in a direction of 180° as indicated by the move portable unit arrow 6-13. The compass 6-6 indicates a direction, in this case, indicating a 180° 6-15 movement as indicated by the arrow 6-13. Once again, the map remains stationary while only the physical device held by the user is moved 6-13. Below the slider is the Sliding Window identifier 6-14 indicating a 180° movement as indicated by the arrow and the indicated value of degrees. In FIG. 6 d, the user is still moving the portable device and the display screen 5-7 in the same direction as indicated by the arrow. This is verified by the Sliding Window identifier below the slider which indicates that the arrow is pointed at 180°.

In FIG. 6 e, the screen of the portable unit 5-7 is now paused over the star 5-2 which is shown on the display screen. The distance and direction between the oval 5-3 and a star 5-2 is illustrated by the vector 6-16. The Sliding Window identifier 6-12 indicates that the user has stopped movement since the circle is within the box.

In FIG. 6 f, the user now moves in the direction of the arrow 6-19. As the user moves the portable unit, the user is observing the screen of the portable unit 5-7 and can see any minute details in the background the stationary map as it progresses along the direction of the arrow 6-19. Below the slider the Sliding Window identifier 6-17 indicates the direction of movement of the portable unit by the arrow and the angular relationship of that arrow being 240°. Referring now to the compass 6-6, the new degree movement of 240° 6-18 is entered.

In FIG. 6 g, the screen of the portable unit 5-7 now presents the object 5-4. In addition the distance and direction between the star 5-2 and the object 5-4 is presented by the vector 6-20. Below the slider since the portable device is stationary, the box indicates that the device is not moving by the zero within the identifier 6-12.

In FIG. 6 h, the user moves the screen of the portable unit 5-7 in the direction of the move portable unit arrow. Once again, the map remains stationary white only the physical device moves. While the portable unit moves the display screen presents any of the details associated with the map. Since the potable unit is moving, the Sliding Window identifier 6-10 below the slider presents the direction of movement of the unit by the arrow at 30°. The compass box 6-6 illustrates the 30° 6-8.

In FIG. 6 i, the user has stopped at the rectangular object 5-6 which is displayed on the screen of the portable unit 5-7. The distance between the object 5-4 and the rectangle 5-6 is indicated by the vector 6-21 which shows the distance and direction. Note below the slider, the box with the circle indicating the movement has stopped since now the user is observing the rectangle and its local environment.

In FIG. 6 j, the screen of the portable unit 5-7 d has been moved 45° along vector 6-22 to display the oval 5-3 within the display 5-7 a. The Sliding Window identifier 6-27 below the slider presents the direction of movement of the unit by the arrow at 45°. Recapping, moving along the 180° dotted arrow 6-23, the screen of the portable unit 5-7 b presents the Star 5-2. Moving along the 240° dotted arrow 6-24, the screen of the portable unit 5-7 c views the object 5-4. The screen of the portable unit 5-7 d can then return to the rectangle 5-6 by moving the unit along the 30° dotted arrow 6-25.

The innovative embodiment allows these distances and angles along the stationary map to be related to the movement of the screen of the portable unit by the user's hand. The physical movement of the portable unit in physical space is bonded to the stationary map in the user's mind. This allows the user to easily relate to the stationary map and allows the user to visualize and “feel” where the various locations are within the map in a physical sense.

This relation of the physical sense to the stationary map can be used to search and find an object that may be further away. Let's assume that the screen of the portable unit 5-7 d is observing the rectangle 5-6 and that the user remembers that there was a triangle 5-5 in the map. The user knows that the triangle 5-5 was located to the lower right somewhere in the 5 o'clock direction. However, the exact location of the triangle 5-5 now needs to be searched since the user knows that the triangle is within the region 7-1 as illustrated in FIG. 7 a. The first intention of the user is to move the screen of the portable unit 5-7 about 300° along the vector 7-2. According to the compass 6-6, a new angle take 300° 7-3 is placed on the circle. Below the slider is the Sliding Window identifier 7-4 illustrating the direction of the portable unit and its angle of 300°. In FIG. 7 b, the user moves the screen of the portable unit 5-7 about 60° along vector 7-6 which adds a new tick 7-5 to the compass. Beneath the slider the Sliding Window identifier 7-7 indicates the arrow which presents the direction the user is moving the display and the degrees of 60°. Not finding the object of interest the triangle 5-5, the user continues the search.

In FIG. 7 c, the user moves the screen of the portable unit 5-7 about 300° along vector 7-8 to finally position the triangle 5-5 in the screen. The Sliding Window identifier 7-4 indicates the direction the user moved the portable device by the arrow at 300°. Once the user finds to triangle 5-5, it is a very easy matter to come back to the rectangle 5-6 since that was the starting point along vector 7-9 as illustrated in FIG. 7 d and the Sliding Window identifier 7-10.

Getting back to the origin (reference point) can be easily verified by the reader, by placing their hand in front of their face, which indicates the (0, 0) location (origin) that would correspond, for example, to where the rectangle 5-6 is located. Now move your hand to different locations within the plane perpendicular before you and one finds that one can always return to the (0, 0) location. Thus, even if the user gets lost searching for an object, the user can always return back to the origin. After finding the triangle 5-5, the process of returning to the origin is straightforward. To return back to the starting point of the where the rectangle 5-6 is located; the user merely moves their hand back in the center of his face. Thus, the reference point of 5-6 illustrating where the rectangle is easy to reestablish and present on the screen of the portable unit since the origin is located at the central common comfortable point of the user.

This technique of maintaining the bitmaps stationary and only moving the portable device can be applied to the map of Bell Labs, the Watchung Reservation and Surprise Lake that was investigated earlier. In FIG. 4 a-c the map was moved while the screen of the portable unit 5-7 was maintained stationary. In FIGS. 5-8, the map remains stationary and the screen of the portable unit is moved. In FIG. 8 a, the starting point or origin would be Bell Labs as indicated on the screen of the portable unit 5-7. The user moves the portable unit in the direction of the move portable unit arrow 8-2. The background image of a stationary map 8-1 exists in a database and as the portable unit moves, memory buffers are filled by the database to present to the user the map corresponding to the distance and angle to where the portable unit was displaced. Furthermore, as the portable unit is moving in a particular direction, the memory components corresponding to that direction are pre-fetched for quicker loading into the memory or cache. The Sliding Window identifier 8-3 as illustrated below the scale corresponds to 340° movement. In FIG. 8 b, the user is viewing the Watchung Reservation on the screen of the portable unit 5-7 and decides to view Surprise Lake. Remembering where Surprise Lake was earlier, the user moves the physical device in the direction of the move portable unit arrow 8-4. The Sliding Window identifier 8-5 as illustrated below the scale corresponds to 40° movement. In FIG. 8 c, the screen of the portable unit 5-7, after viewing Surprise Lake, is now moved back to its initial starting position of Bell Labs. The user moves the physical device along the move portable unit arrow 8-6 and returns to Bell labs as illustrated in FIG. 8 d. The user has returned the portable unit 5-7 back to Bell Labs once again and at this point this is the reference location or origin as indicated earlier which would be in a comfortable position before the user's face. In addition since the user has stopped the movement of the portable unit 5-7 as indicated by the identifier 6-12.

An inertial guidance system 9-2 is illustrated in a MEMS integrated circuit 9-1 as depicted in FIG. 9 a. Within the inertial guidance system are two boxes: the three axis accelerometer 9-4 and three axis gyroscope 9-3. The accelerometer senses the current acceleration of the portable unit along the three axes in distance per unit time. The gyroscope determines the current device orientation with respect to the three axes. The screen of the portable unit is displaying a map at a given scale with the origin of the map at the center of the screen. The user decides to view the region to the upper right of the map. The user moves the portable device into that physical space. Once the portable unit is moved, the information from the accelerometer and gyroscope sensors is applied to a microprocessor. In addition, the microprocessor uses the current scale of the map. The microprocessor calculates (based on the acceleration, orientation scale of the map, and origin position) the new position of the map that should be displayed in the center of the screen of the portable unit. The microprocessor issues instructions to the memory to provide the data corresponding to the newly calculated position. The data from the memory is processed and applied to the screen of the portable unit. The map corresponding to the new position is viewed on the screen by the user to provide the user with information regarding the contents of the map to the upper right of the map corresponding in scale to where the screen of the portable unit currently is. Since the processor calculation and memory access can occur in microseconds, the screen can display the contents of the new regions almost instantaneously to the user. Thus, the map that is displayed to the user on the screen of the portable device provides map information that is tightly bound to the positional location of the portable unit. This provides the user with an intuitive feeling of the positions of the objects in the map to the physical positions of portable unit to the user. The system behaves as if a stationary map exists behind the portable unit and the screen of the portable unit is a Sliding Window exposing the portion of the image of the stationary map behind the portable unit.

As the user moves the portable unit, the movement is sensed by the inertial guidance system. This information provided by the inertial guidance system can be applied to a processor and an algorithm or a software program to determine the actual movement and relative direction of movement of the portable unit as the user moves the portable unit as indicated above. This information is used to display the correct portion of the stationary background map on the screen.

The interaction of the movement of the portable unit can be performed in a two dimensional plane (along the plane of the screen) or in a three dimensional space (along the plane of the screen and perpendicular to the screen). The term directional distance is a vector which has a vector representing distance and direction. In two dimensions, the vector would have distance and an angle measured to a reference axis. In two dimensions, the directional distance can be R (distance) and Theta. In a three dimensions, the system is usually described in the Cartesian system (X, Y and Z axes), although the cylindrical (P, Phi and Z) or spherical (R, Phi, Theta) systems may be appropriate if the map has the right symmetry. For instance, the directional distance in three dimensions can be defined as R (distance) and two angles: Phi angle and Theta angle. However, before interacting with the memory, all coordinate systems need to translated to the Cartesian system since the memory array would typically be arranged using the Cartesian system. A narrower term perpendicular distance implies the perpendicular distance from a surface of a plane. The magnitude of direction is the distance between two points on a map. The map could also be an image, an object or any bitmap. In addition, a two dimensional cross section would be the image of slicing an object with a plane. This image would contain the outline of the object.

The three dimensional system uses a vector that has a directional distance as in spherical coordinates. The Phi and Theta degrees are also used. These spherical coordinates can be translated into Cartesian coordinates when needed. The perpendicular displacement of the portable unit allows a map that is being viewed to represent a three dimensional structure, for example, a city with building where each building has several floors.

In FIG. 9 b, a more detailed block diagram of the portable unit is presented. This unit has an antenna 9-6 coupled to an RF module 9-10. The RF module is coupled to the processor 9-12. An interface block that has a speaker 9-7 and a microphone 9-8 is coupled to the processor 9-12. The processor 9-12 is also coupled to a display 9-9, a memory 9-11, a GPS (Global Positioning Satellite) 9-13 and software block 9-14. The MEMS inertial guidance system 9-1 is coupled to the processor and to the software block to evaluate the movement of the portable handheld unit. The inertial guidance system provides movement data to a microprocessor and the microprocessor calculates the angle and the distance of the movement using the software block. An external memory or database can be used to store a portion of the image of a stationary map. An RF module 9-10 and antenna 9-6 can access an external database to supply the memory with data for the image of a stationary map. The GPS can, if desired, provide geographical locations data such as latitude and longitude.

FIG. 10 a and FIG. 10 b illustrate the difference between the two systems of when the map is moved and when the device is moved. In FIG. 10 a, the map 10-1 is moved while the portable unit 4-2 remains stationary. When the map is moved as indicated by the arrow in FIG. 10 a, the screen of the portable unit 4-2 remains stationary and displays the map as it is slid to the lower left exposing the upper right portions on the screen of the portable unit. The map 10-1 exists in a memory or a fast cache. These memories may need to be replenished by a database as the map presents itself to the screen of the portable unit. The movement of the map is accomplished by depressing the movement control 3-2 by a finger 3-3. Other means of sliding the map include a touch screen where a finger sliding on the face of the screen or display drags the map. The table beneath indicates three aspects of the sliding map movement. First, the device remains stationary. Second, the movement of the map is done in increments and any scale associated with it to provide an intuitive grasp to the user of dimensions is lost. And lastly, because of this the map movement lacks an intuitive “feel to the user” as to regards to the distance and angles the map has been slid. With regards to the last item, the user cannot use his experience to easily identify where they have been and how to get back.

In contrast, FIG. 10 b shows the innovative embodiment of the device movement technique. The compass 6-6 shows the movement of 45° of the device or portable unit 5-7 is moved in the direction of the arrow 10-4. The screen of the portable unit 5-7 moves to the upper right and displays the stationary map on the screen of the portable unit. Thus, the user moves the portable unit 5-7 in the direction 10-4 while the map 10-3 remains stationary. The innovative device movement presents three aspects. The first is that the map 10-3 remains stationary. The second aspect is that the movement of the portable unit 5-7 directly correlates to dimensions of the map 10-3. This is a big advantage since now as the user moves the portable unit; the distance that the user moves the portable unit through is related directly to the distance (at a given scale) of the map 10-3. Thus, the movement of the device or portable unit directly correlates with the map dimensions. Lastly, the movement that the user experiences allows the user to “feel” and grasp the various locations by various positions in physical space. This provides for this innovative distance and angle understanding of the map 10-3 which remains stationary and is being scanned by the moving portable unit 5-7.

Two flowcharts are illustrated. The first flowchart in FIG. 11 a relates to the sliding of a map on the screen of a stationary unit. The second flowchart in FIG. 11 b moves the screen of a unit across an image of a stationary map.

In FIG. 11 a, the user enters the location into an online map 11-1. The user then moves the map to find a new item 11-2 and if the item is not found 11-3, then compensation is made if the map was scaled (11-8 and 11-9). If the user is lost 11-10 then the user should enter the location again 11-12 and repeat the previous steps. However, if the item had been found 11-3, and the user knew their position 11-4 and desired more details 11-6, then the map could be scaled to magnify the map 11-7. Once the user extracted the information desired, the map is un-scaled 11-9 and if the user is not lost 11-10, then the user could drag the map to find a new location 11-2.

In FIG. 11 b, the user enters the location into an online map 11-1. The user then moves the device to find a new item 11-11 and if the item is not found, then compensation is made if the map was scaled. If the user is lost 11-10 then the user should move the device to the start position 11-14 and repeat the previous steps. However, if the item had been found, and the user knew their position 11-4 and desired more details, then the map could be scaled to magnify the map. Once the user extracted the information desired, the map is un-scaled and if the user is not lost, then the user could move the device to find a new item 11-11. In this flowchart where the device or portable unit is moved, the “feel” that the physical space provides indicates that the path through the known position decision 11-4 would typically follow the arrowed line path 11-13 since the user improves their chances of knowing the position or location. Similarly, the user will less likely be lost 11-10 and follow will the arrowed line path 11-13.

FIG. 12 illustrates another flowchart. The user enters the location or item 12-1, the system then determines the memory size of the screen 12-2 and once the location or item is found, the system retrieves the map from memory 12-3 and then determines if the item is sync'ed (typically, in the center of the screen) and maps this point to the reference (0, 0) or origin. If the unit is not synced, the flow moves to box 12-4 which allows the user to sync the (0, 0) point to any particular portion of the screen or display. Once the unit is synced with the (0, 0), the user then enters the Sliding Window mode 12-6. The user moves into the retrieval of the adjacent and diagonal map blocks that are outside the field of view of the display 12-7. At this point with the memory being filled, the user can move the device in physical space 12-8 to view the stationary map. As the user is moving the portable device, the system is calculating the physical angles and distances 12-9 and transferring these measurements to the stationary map. This shows the user those items that were previously out of view and also prepares determining if more memory will be required, particularly if the portable device is moving in the same and constant direction. Thus, if more memory is required 12-10 the system fetches more memory and continues the calculation of the distance and angle measurement 12-9. If the memory is sufficient, the display continues showing the map with the details 12-11. If the user still maintains the device in motion 12-12 there may be a need to get additional memory. However if the device remains stationary, the user can display the map the angle and the distance from the starting point 12-13. IF the user is satisfied with the results of this particular search, and the user is done 12-14 and then can exit the Sliding Window mode 12-15 then terminate the process 12-16. However if the user wants to continue viewing the map, the user of the device can retrieve adjacent and diagonal map blocks 12-7 according to the direction that the user is moving returning the user back to moving the device in physical space 12-8.

FIG. 13 a illustrates yet another inventive embodiment of identifying where objects are when they are not in view within the display. The user usually starts by using a reduced magnification of the map to determine various adjacent aspects of the map. The map will be scaled down (decreased magnification) to see the adjoining components or adjacent members that the user may be interested in viewing. Once these components are located, the user may want to view these components at an increased magnification. For example, when the user uses the settings for the bubble 3-6 (the slide at 3-5 and screen 5-1) the screen of the portable unit 5-1 shows a large area image of a stationary map is presented to the user. This image includes the star 5-2, the oval 5-3, the object 5-4 and the triangle 5-5. In addition, in the very center it is a rectangle 5-6 which corresponds to the location of the (0, 0) or origin. When the user increases magnification according to the bubble 3-8 (the slide at 3-7 and 5-7) the rectangle 5-6 would remain within the screen of the portable device 5-7. Thus, when the slider is moved to location 3-7 corresponding to the bubble 3-8, the user has magnified or scaled positively the image of the stationary background map including the rectangle 5-6.

However, before doing so the user can place location markers on the objects using the Marker identifier 13-1. The location markers can be letters, numbers, or shapes placed near the desired objects to be viewed. Other possibilities include placing the pointer of a mouse near the object and clicking, or verbally stating to location mark this point using vice recognition. For example, the location markers can be the squares 13-2 to 13-5 containing numbers. The number 1 marker is placed near the object 5-4, the number 2 marker is placed near the star 5-2, the number 3 marker is placed near the oval 5-3 and the number 4 marker is placed near the triangle 5-2. The portable unit can be either stationary or moving. Once the slider moves to 3-7 to give the relationship of 3-8, the rectangle 5-6 is magnified as depicted in FIG. 13 b. The location marker identifier 13-10 indicates the system is enabled. After magnification, a road 13-11 becomes visible and the rectangle 5-6 has also been magnified. On this display screen 5-7 are those earlier location markers labeling corresponding arrows (or any equivalent symbols) to point to the matched objects in the screen in FIG. 13 a. For example, to get to the number 1 marker 13-2 follow arrow 13-6, to get to the number 2 marker 13-3 follow arrow 13-7, to get to the number 3 marker 13-4 follow arrow 13-8 and to get to the number 4 marker 13-5 follow arrow 13-9. This inventive embodiment allows for the map to be moved by either the motion control 3-2 or by sliding a finger along the screen. An alternative embodiment would be to move the physical portable unit while keeping the map stationary. All of the arrows and location markers are transparent allowing the user to see the map beneath them. As the user moves the device to one of the identifiers, for example, in the direction of the arrow 13-6 corresponding to the number 1 marker 13-2, the three other arrows 13-7 through 13-9 continually adjust themselves to point to the current location of the other three objects. This innovative technique allows the user to mark locations, magnify the image of the map, and find all marked locations (without reverting to a lower magnification) by following pointers that direct the user to locations that are currently out of view of the screen. Furthermore, the user can find all marked locations without getting lost.

FIG. 14 illustrates yet another flowchart. The user enters the location or item 12-1, the system then determines the memory size of the screen 12-2 and once the location or item is found, the system retrieves the map from memory 12-3 and then determines if the item is sync'ed (typically, in the center of the screen) maps this point to the reference (0, 0) or origin. If the unit is not synced, the flow moves to box 12-4 which allows the user to sync the (0, 0) point to any particular portion of the screen or display. Once the unit is synced with the (0, 0), the user then reduces the scale of the map 14-1. The user analyzes and studies items in the local area 14-2, clicks to place markers near the interesting positions or locations 14-3 (the positions can be marked with markers from a list, markers generated by the user, clicked and identified with a mouse click, clicked and voice activated), increases the magnification 14-4, enters the window mode 15-5 and then the user selects a marker 14-6. The user is given a choice 14-7: manually follow the marker 14-8 or let the system auto route to the marker 14-9. Once the user arrives at the position 14-10, and analyzes and extracts what they needed, the user returns to the origin 14-11. If the user still has other markers to view 14-12 then they select a different marker, or they terminate the search 14-13. As the user is moving the portable device or the map is being moved, the system is calculating the physical angles and distances and transferring these measurements to the identifiers of the remaining unviewed markers.

So far everything has been done in a two dimensional space (X and Y axes), the technique can also be extended to 3-D (three dimensional) space (X, Y and Z axes). Three dimensions (3-D) are important for the description of buildings, the layout of each floor in a building, study of molecular models, analyzing the internal structure of solid objects, etc. There can be several ways of viewing the 3-D space. For instance, the X and Y axes may be moved by touching and moving fingers across the screen while the third dimension of the Z axis is displayed by a movement of the portable unit. Another way is for all three dimensions to be activated by the movement of the portable unit in three dimensions. Yet another way is to use a touch screen to move in two dimensions and have a third temperature scale to move in the third dimension. Speech and voice recognition can be used to control the movement of the map, by stating for example, move left, move up, move down, move in, move out three units, etc. In addition, there can be many variations by combining the above methods.

FIG. 15 a illustrates a 3-D map where the user moves the screen of the portable unit in a stationary map that is three dimensional. The plane 15-3 can be selected as a reference plane. The X, Y and Z axes 15-1 show that the user maintains the screen of the portable unit parallel to the X-Y plane. In addition, the direction of the X axis determines the reference 0° angle in this plane. Other possibilities allow the screen in the XZ or YZ planes and for that matter, at any orientation with respect to the three axes. Below the scale 3-4 is the 3-D identifier 15-2 with an arrow moving upwards. This would correspond to the path of movement in the vector 15-8. The slider 3-7 is set to the same magnification as in the screen of the portable unit shown in FIG. 13 b and beneath the scale is the 3-D identifier 15-2. The reference plane 15-3 is equivalent to the map presented in FIG. 13 a. This plane shows the star 5-2, the object 5-4, the triangle 5-5 and the rectangle 5-6. The screen of the portable unit 5-7 a is displaying the object 5-4. After the perpendicular motion 15-8, the user is now on plane 15-4 which contains a rectangle 15-5, a pie shape 15-6 and a cross 15-7. The user moves the portable unit along the vector 15-9 to display on the screen of the portable unit 5-7 b the cross 15-7 and its local vicinity. The overall distance that the unit has moved is illustrated by the vector 15-10. This vector has a distance, the magnitude of 15-10, associated with the three dimension space. This vector 15-10 is positioned at an angle φ (phi) from the X-axis and at an angle θ (theta) from the Z-axis, thus, providing the spherical coordinates for the movement.

FIG. 15 b illustrates the screen nine (9) views of different planes on the screen of the portable unit 5-7 c through 5-7 k. According to the transparent head of the arrow 15-13, the portable unit is being moved towards the user or out of the page. Due to the movement of the portable unit, each plane presents a cross sectional view of the object. The head is transparent to allow the object (or map) behind the head to be viewed. These views are presented when the unit is moved perpendicular to the plane of the page. These images presented need to be combined mentally by the user to visualize that the object being viewed is a sphere 15-11. The solid image is effectively determined by a summation of all the cross sections of the object as the user moves perpendicular to the screen. If the user cannot guess what the object is, then the unit can present an image of a sphere.

FIG. 15 c shows the movement away from the user by the downwards arrow labeled “9 to 1”. The label means that the user is looking at 9, 8, 7 . . . to 1 in secession in FIG. 15 b causing the portable unit to move away from the user; thus, the transparent tail 15-12 (or the feathers) of the arrow would be visible to the user. The tail is transparent to allow the object (or map) behind the tail to be viewed. FIG. 15 d shows the movement towards the user by the upwards arrow labeled “1 to 9”. The label means that the user is looking at 1, 2, 3 . . . to 9 in secession in FIG. 15 b causing the portable unit to move toward the user; thus, the head 15-13 (or the point) of the arrow would be visible to the user. Both the tail 15-12 and head 15-13 are visible on the screen and are transparent.

The transparent tail and head can indicate to the user how far above or below a reference plane the current view on the screen of the portable unit is. As the user moves away from the reference plane, the diameter of the transparent head or tail can be made proportional to the distance above or below the reference plane. For a three dimensional display, the transparent head and tail symbols along with the projected transparent arrow on the plane of the screen, the user can follow the arrow to move to the correct planar location and then use the head or tails symbol to alter the depth or height above the plane corresponding to the screen to locate a missing object or location.

FIG. 16 a-c illustrates other distance and movement measuring devices and procedures. FIG. 16 a illustrates transceivers 16-1, 16-2 and 16-3 placed in the local environment. These transceivers initialize their interface by emitting signals 16-4, 16-5 and 16-6 and receiving the bi-directional signals 16-4, 16-5 and 16-6 from these transceivers to determine a relative position of each transceiver with respect to the other. Then, in FIG. 16 b, a portable unit 5-7 enters the environment and sends signals 16-7, 16-8 and 16-9 between the portable unit 5-7 to the transceivers 16-1, 16-2 and 16-3 to determine the relative position of the unit. This information is used by the unit 5-7 to determine the amount of movement, either with or without an interaction with the inertial guidance system. FIG. 16 c illustrates an addition of an external processor 16-16 to aid in the calculation. In FIG. 16 c, a portable unit 5-7 enters the environment and sends signals 16-7, 16-8 and 16-9 from the portable unit 5-7 to the transceivers 16-13, 16-14 and 16-15. The transceivers 16-13, 16-14 and 16-15 send their results 16-10, 16-11 and 16-12 to the processor 16-16 to determine the relative position of the unit. The processor then sends a signal 16-17 to the portable unit 5-7 to provide the relative displacement of the unit. The signal can contain a wavelength or a short duration of energy that can be monitored and measured which indicates time of flight of the signal. The signal can be RE, audio, light or any other form of electromagnetic radiation. For example, ultra-sound can be used to measure the distance of the back of the portable unit to the closest obstruction. As the user moves the portable unit away or toward the obstruction, the Z-axis values is altered in a three dimension system. This distance is used to present the different planes within the three dimensional solid being viewed on the screen.

FIG. 17 depicts a 3-D space where the user can choose to remain on the same plane or move between planes. The goal is to get from home 17-1 to the star 17-2, the first oval 17-3, the second oval 17-4 or the triangle 17-5 without contacting any of the obstacles. The movement could be performed by moving the unit or by moving the map. This maze or puzzle can be a 2-D or 3-D game.

FIG. 18 a shows a notebook computer 1-1 while in FIG. 18 b a portable handheld unit 5-7 is illustrated. These are some of the components that can be used to perform the functions that will be described next. FIG. 18 c illustrates a webpage 18-1 that contains an extraction of a social webpage. Along the top of the webpage is the name of the social website 18-13 (i.e., Facebook, Flickr, Instagram, Google+, Linkedin), a search entry 18-14 and a menu selection 18-15. Each of the social websites can have a different visual layout, other than the described in FIG. 18 c, but the internal components are typically similar. A scroll bar 18-6 offers the ability to scroll through the contents of the webpage that is not currently visible to the user. As the user scrolls, hidden content is exposed within the current webpage (that has a given height 18-7 and width 18-8 dimension) being displayed. The tab 18-6 is moved under the control of a mouse, finger or voice control. A column of current friends 18-12 is illustrated. This may contain pictures of all your friends, in the next column over to the left are possible friends 18-11 and there could be a selection of pictures that you might be able to pick and invite into your personal network. Text and video can also be used in most columns. All the way to the left is the index column 18-9, this typically contains the owners' picture from different perspectives or only one picture. If several are illustrated, they could have several perspectives depending on what user profile might like to present. The column 18-10 to the immediate right contains Mary's recent activity of her website. In this column, she can accept friends, search for e-mails, she could add friend's whose picture she recognizes. Note that the website is bounded by the dotted lines (called edges) 18-2, 18-3, 18-4 and 18-5. These dotted lines (edges) correspond to the edge of the screen's display of the notebook computer 1-1 or the portable unit 5-7. Typically, the dimensions of the webpage match the dimensions of the display screen. In FIG. 18 d, the tab 18-6 has been moved all the way to the bottom.

FIG. 19 illustrates the inventive idea where on the display screen which is bounded by the edges of 18-2, 18-3, 18-4 and 18-5, contains more than one webpage. Several webpages of a social aspect nature abut one another and are illustrated on one display and this inventive display of a plurality of webpages is called a composite webpage. The simplest of all cases is to have only two webpages (not shown) of, let's say, Mary 18-13 and John 19-5 abutted together who may be a husband-and-wife team. When they logon, they can see each other's activity. Some activity could be blocked depending on the desires and interests that Mary and John may share mutually. However, this display can also be more of a group friendship webpage where not only does Mary and John show a website on the display screen but webpages of Dee's 19-7 and Mike's 19-6 and others are also included as illustrated in FIG. 19. Each of the social websites is separated from one another by the demarcation lines 19-1, 19-2, 19-3, and 19-4 which emphasizes the internal edge of each website. The demarcation lines help to visually segregate the individual webpages from one another for the user's perusal. A total of nine websites: 18-17, 19-5, 19-6, 19-7, 19-8, 19-9, 19-10, 19-11 and 19-12 are illustrated in the display. Note that Mary's webpage 18-17 is abutted on the right edge by John's webpage 19-5, on the left edge by webpage 19-9, on the top edge by webpage 19-11 and along the bottom edge by Dee's webpage 19-7.

All of these sites are opened to display their contents which in this case show social friends or acquaintances. Also note that the height dimension of all webpages is the same and that the width dimension of all webpages is the same. This allows easy packing of webpages into a composite webpage. In addition, we see a cursor 19-13 currently associated with John 19-5, but if the cursor is moved through a demarcation line or internal edge, the cursor would be coupled to a different website. The idea is to present several webpages from several different websites on one display. The layout can be determined by a first team comprising the individual users Mary, John, Dee, Mike and others who are social friends. Let's say that this is a social website to raise funds for the elimination of liver cancer. Then all of those individuals, who are involved in this project, will share that particular aspect of their social webpage. On the other hand, some of these users may share their webpage with a second team comprising different individual users (that have not mentioned) to create other composite webpages. The other composite webpages may not necessarily be visible to members of the first team. The depth of sharing will be determined by the individual users themselves. Once again the dotted lines 18-2, 18-3, 18-4, and 18-5 depict the edge of the display screen.

The association of one person with others can get quite complex. To help overcome this complexity, the techniques (for example, see FIG. 10 a and FIG. 10 b), presented earlier in this specification can be used to view other websites. FIG. 20 a illustrates a Cartesian coordinate system 20-1 where three axes X, Y and Z are separated from one another by 90°. In FIG. 20 b, the handheld unit can be moved through physical space in an X-Y plane to view the composite webpage 20-2 or in a negative/positive Z direction as shown by the dashed arrow 20-3 to get to additional layers of composite webpages (for example the composite webpage 20-4). The composite webpage 20-2 and 20-4 are layered in three dimensions. The movement can be a physical movement of the portable device, finger application onto the display screen or a combination of both as presented earlier in this specification. Note that the dotted lines 18-2, 18-3, 18-4 and 18-5 corresponding to the display screen are only presenting a part of Mary's page 18-17 and a cursor 19-13. By scaling down Mary's page, then her localized friends would be shown on the display screen such as Lisa, Joan, Bob, John, Mike, Dee, Mark and Lulu. In this particular composite webpage, these are some of Mary's closest friends but composite webpages like these can be social, may have a different aspect in that they share pictures, videos, text. They may be brothers and sisters or they may be employees from work, who are using the social composite website to see what their friends are doing and allowing friends to see what Mary 18-17 is doing. By moving the device along the dotted line 20-3 to the composite webpage 20-4, Mary's closest friend list can be extended to Judy, Jodi, Lena, Gina, Fawn, Dora, Jade, Lola. FIG. 20 c illustrates a table 20-5 that shows Mary's first level friends. All of the first level friends are in illustrated by the webpages that are dotted. However, Mary has a second level friends who are more distant from Mary in the composite webpage of 20-2 and 20-4. These pages are not dotted. A complete list of Mary's second level friends is illustrated in the table 20-7 of FIG. 20 d.

FIG. 21 illustrates a block diagram 21-1 of composite website 21-6 shown on a display screen and how the mouse location 21-2 is utilized to update the memory 21-3 with the social website 21-4. The memory typically resides in the portable unit and is typically a local memory 21-3. The memory can be composed of Flash, RAM, ROM, or any other type of memory that is portable. The memory can also reside outside of the portable unit and be accessed by an RF module as discussed in FIG. 1 a-2 b. The memory can also be partitioned into blocks where one block can be independently accessed over another block. The Tran (Transfer) blocks 21-5 a through 21-5 i are used to identify the location of the cursor 19-13 and determines where the user currently is viewing a particular webpage. This identification allows an update function between the memory and the social website to be performed. Each Tran block is coupled 21-8 a through 21-8 i to the memory while each Tran Block is also coupled 21-9 a through 21-9 i to the social website. A bus with “i” bits positioned parallel couples a single bit to each of the Tran blocks 21-5 a through 22-5 i. Each transfer block 21-5 is responsible for a particular webpage of the composite webpage being depicted on the display screen 21-6 which is bounded by the dotted lines 18-2, 18-3, 18-4, and 18-5. In this case, we see Mary's page in the center with the cursor 19-13 located within the Mary's composite webpage. Surrounding Mary's page are several pages including Lisa, Joan, Bob, John, Mike, D's, Mark, and Lulu. Each of the pages has a bidirectional path 21-7 a through 21-7 i to its corresponding transfer block. Thus, when the mouse pointer 19-13 moves to let's say Lulu's page then the transfer block 21-7 d associated with Lulu's page searches the local memory 21-3 corresponding to that particular social website 21-4 and updates the data within Lulu's page if a set time period has been exceeded. The time period can be set by the user.

FIG. 22 a illustrates a sub-section of the previous block diagram 21-1. The mouse location 21-2 identifies which particular webpage the mouse is in, and passes the information along the bus. Each Tran block is coupled to one bit of the T bus, a webpage, the memory and the social website. The webpage1 22-1 couples to Tran block 21-5 a via line 21-7 a. Similarly, the webpage2 22-2 couples to Tran block 21-5 b via line 21-7 b. The particular webpages illustrated here can be webpages which may have been extracted from different servers. In the lower half of the diagram, the user has a memory 21-3 in the portable unit which couples to the transfer block in a bidirectional connection of 21-8 a and 21-9 a. The transfer blocks 21-5 a and 21-5 b are coupled by the bidirectional path 21-8 a and 21-8 b to the memory 21-3 and by the bidirectional path 21-9 a and 21-9 b to the social website 21-4 that is on an external server. See FIG. 1 a for an example of the network. FIG. 22 b illustrates a table 22-3 which presents the ‘i’ bus to identify the location of the mouse and the actions performed on this type of connection that is made within the system. The least significant bit corresponds to the transfer block 21-5 a while the next significant bit corresponds to 21-5 b and so on. When the mouse is located in the contents of webpage 21-1, the mouse location is determined to be 00001. Under this condition, the memory 21-3 is connected to webpage2, webpage3 and the remaining webpages of the composite webpage. However, the external website is coupled to webpage1 and is coupled to the memory. Thus, only the content for webpage1 is updated. The second row where the mouse location is 00010, the memory is coupled to webpage1, webpage3, and the remaining webpages of the composite webpage. While the website in the social website 21-4 is coupled to webpage2 and to memory 21-3.

A flowchart is illustrated in FIG. 22 c. The social website 21-4 generates the time of last website webpage update called T_(S) in block 22-4. While the memory 21-3 generates the time that the contents for the corresponding memory webpage update T_(M) in block 22-5 had happened. These two times are compared in the compare block 22-6 and the result is presented to the decision block 22-7. If T_(S) minus T_(M) is greater than some given Δ assigned by the user or the system moves into block 22-8 and update the memory corresponding to the transfer block associated with the corresponding webpage of the social website 21-4. Back to the decision block 22-7 if the difference is less than a Δ then nothing happens and the system moves into the combiner 22-10. The value of Δ is set by the user and can be any value that the user decides. The smaller the value, the more often the website is accessed and vice versa. The system then moves to the next webpage in block 22-11 and indicates to the memory 21-3 to continue the process.

FIG. 23 a illustrates a slightly different configuration of that given in FIG. 22 a where now a time difference-based decision is made by the time difference block 23-1 and a mouse-based decision by the mouse location block 21-2 are generated. The output of the time difference 23-1 as a parallel bus with bits going into a logic circuit 23-2. The output of the logic circuit is fed to each of the Tran A blocks by the parallel line 23-6. Again, only show a small subset corresponding to what might be on an actual display unit or this system can correspond to a husband-and-wife, for instance. The mouse location also goes to the Tran A block 21-5 a and the remaining parallel bits go to the next Tran A block 21-5 b. The Tran A block 21-5 a is coupled to a webpage1 22-1, a corresponding location in the memory 21-3 and to the social website 21-4 that's being displayed on the display unit. The next Tran A block 21-5 b couples webpage2 22-2 to the memory 21-3 and its corresponding social website within 21-4. The output of the memory and the output of the social website each provide a timestamp these two timestamps are compared by the time difference block 23-1 to determine if a time-based decision should be applied to the logic block 23-2. In FIG. 23 b, a table has along the top row, a column mouse location and a second column time-based location. The parallel bus going through the Tran A blocks can carry a 0 or 1. If the mouse location for the Tran A block is 0 then it doesn't matter what the value of the time-based decision is as shown by the X in the column under the time-based section. However, if the mouse location is a 1 indicating that the mouse is located within that website inside of composite website extracted from the social website then the website is coupled to the webpage and the memory is updated.

The logic block 23-2 mentioned earlier is illustrated in FIG. 23 c. The time-based bit goes to the AND gate 23-7 and to a transmission gate 23-4 the mouse-based bit goes to the AND gate 23-7. Depending on the values that are placed on the mouse based and the time-based line, the transistor 23-3 switches and then the output 23-6 could couple to ground by the n-channel device 23-3. The output 23-6 would otherwise connect the time-based signal. For example, in the FIG. 23 d, the mouse location may be in one particular website of the composite website while the time-based determination stream may have a different value as illustrated in the top row. The columns are the mouse location to the far left, in the middle is the time-based column, and finally the type of connection that's being made dependent on the values that are inserted into the parallel bit pattern of the mouse location and the time base decision. For the upper row, when the mouse location is 00001 and the time-based value is 00100, the memory is connected to webpage2, webpage4 an webpage5 while the website is coupled to the webpage1 and memory 21-3 is downloading the latest contents while simultaneously, an update to the memory is performed for webpage3. The lower row shows the case for the mouse location as 00010 and the time-based value 01000. Here, the memory is coupled to webpage1, webpage3 and webpage5, while the website is coupled to the webpage2 and the memory while simultaneously downloading the latest information to the memory being updated for webpage4.

FIG. 24 illustrates a system 24-1 a using only the mouse location 21-2 with the Tran blocks (21-5 a through 21-5 i) interfacing to the memory 21-3, to the different websites 24-1 through 24-9 where each website could each be on different servers, and a display screen presenting a composite webpage 21-6. The mouse locator in box 21-2 sends out and T bit parallel bus that couples to the different Tran blocks. There are several connections to each transfer block. Connections are made to the website as 24-10 a all the way up to 24-10 i. Another set of connections are made to memory 21-3 as 21-8 a through 21-8 i. Finally, the last set of connections from 21-7 a to 21-7 i are made to the composite webpage 21-6 displayed on the display screen. Each website 24-1 through to 24-9 have a corresponding display component in the composite webpage display 21-6 as webpage A through webpage I. Note that the cursor 19-13 is associated with website F and that the boundaries for the display screen of 18-2, 18-3, 18-4, and 18-5 as before. The internal edges are the demarcation lines which segregates the composite webpage into individual webpages.

A partial block diagram and flowchart combination is illustrated in FIG. 25. It has a time-based time difference block 21-1 and a mouse location block 21-2 that provides an output that each provide a sequence of parallel bits ‘i’ where the sequencing of these bits are distributed in parallel. The time-based information goes to the logic 23-2 which was illustrated earlier. The output 23-6 of the logic 23-2 and the mouse-based information goes into the Tran A block 21-5 a and proceeds to the next block 21-5 b. Associated with each of these Tran A blocks is the same connectivity that was described earlier. The Tran A blocks are connected individually to a particular webpage of the composite webpage. Each Tran A block also couples to the memory 21-3 as well as coupling to the external website 25-1 and 25-2. A comparison is made between the two webpages 22-1 and 22-2 in the block 22-5 which determines the time of last memory webpage update T_(M). In addition, each website is monitored 25-1 and 25-2 to determine when the website being presented has information of a last update. A comparison is made of the last time the website has been updated and assigns that to T_(S) in block 22-4. A comparison is made in compare block 22-6 which then makes its way to a decision block 22-7. If T_(S) minus T_(M) is greater than Δ then send T_(M) to server in block 25-3, proceed to determine the differences 25-4, and update memory 21-3 with differences in step 25-5. If T_(S) minus T_(M) is less than Δ than proceed to the circle 22-10 and move to the next webpage 22-11 and continue potential updates.

FIG. 26 a illustrates another embodiment using the inventive use depicting the user's favorite websites on a composite webpage. A user may setup their composite webpage to hold or contain favorite and other websites that the user typically visits on a regular basis. The positions of the webpage in the composite website are set by the user. Furthermore, the memory which is local, as mentioned earlier, can hold the last version of the composite webpage. This composite webpage within the memory can be updated even when not being actively used by the user, such that, when the user accesses the composite website at a later date, most if not all pages have been updated. This saves a large amount of waiting time when the composite webpage becomes activated by the user. The update process to the memory continues once the composite webpage is being actively used.

The cursor 19-13 is contained in the favorite entry webpage shown to be bounded by the dotted lines 18-3, 18-4, 18-2 and 18-5. This is what is actually shown on the display screen and the favorite webpage can be scaled down to include the demarcation lines which separate one webpage from another. Then by performing further magnifications or reductions, the user can display more or less of this overall composite webpage. These webpages appear to be glued together by the demarcation lines or edges. The positioning of these webpages can be determined by the user so that they can get to what they need very quickly by remembering where they place them. For example, by moving the portable unit to the right, the mail webpage 26-2 becomes visible, or if the unit is moved back to the favorite webpage and then downwards, the user arrives at the USPTO website 26-1. The user may have split the webpages into different sections, for instance, news 1 webpage, news 2 webpage, news 3 webpage and news 4 webpage are all in the same general area to the left of the favorite webpage. The search engines may be located directly above the favorite webpage where search engine 1 webpage and search engine 2 webpage exist. A science webpage grouping is placed around the email webpage where a webpage of science 1, science 2, science 3 and science 4 are illustrated. Below the e-mail webpage is a YouTube webpage and to the left of the YouTube webpage is the website of the user. Finally, there are two social webpages next to the USPTO website and the my website home page. Note that there are number of vacancies which can be either left that way or filled in.

FIG. 26 b illustrates the case where the user moves the portable unit downwards to pick up the USPTO website. Again the movement here is being addressed as in the very early parts of this documentation where the physical movement of the portable unit moves the users screen across this composite webpage. In addition the user scaled down the composite website to view addition webpages. The view of the display screen is now bounded by 18-2, 18-3, 18-4 and 18-5 and flows with the physical move. In addition, as the physical device moves, the cursor 19-3 moves within the area of display such that the cursor remains in same relative position with respect to the display screen thereby illustrating the USPTO webpages.

In FIG. 27 a, the user had clicked on the USPTO webpage and although the USPTO webpage may have an index and various types of pages, different user may find particular pages of more interest than other pages. These webpages are the preferred sub-sites of one of the user's favorite websites. This inventive technique allows the user to selectively place various sub-webpages of the USPTO website at different physical locations with respect to one another. When the USPTO webpage is clicked, the user arrives at the users' composite USPTO patent webpage. The cursor 19-13 is within the patents webpage. In this sequence of layout of webpages, the user has placed the search page to the immediate right and the search publication page farther to the right. The fees webpage would be located to the immediate left of the patents webpage. The private PAIR (Patent Application InfoRmation) webpage which allows access to the users' applications is below. Further below that is the public PAIR webpage. Sometimes a user may need to call the examiner to move an application through publication and is located to the immediate left of private PAIR. The Examiners' phone webpage is a right downwards diagonal from the patent webpage. Access to the MPEP (Manuel of Patent Examining Procedure) which is used often is located diagonally to the upper right. Surrounding the MPEP webpage are the 37 CFR (Code of Federal Regulations) rules and the 35 USC (United States Code) laws for easy access to the user. The user may decide to incorporate a search engine 1 or 2 there thereby indicating that the user has the flexibility of inserting sub-webpages other than those relating strictly to the USPTO website. Also, the trademark and the copyright page which are located diagonally to the left. Finally, the user may be interested in finding a practitioner on the Find practitioner webpage located along the upper left diagonal. The OED (Office of Enrollment and Discipline) webpage to ensure that everything is done with the patent office according to the allowable means is further to the left. Again, there are abundant numbers of vacancies here and these vacancies can be filled out or left blank depending on the desires of the user.

FIG. 27 b illustrated another embodiment of the invention which is called the email nomenclature. The user clicking on the e-mail webpage and this gives to use the ability to compose the e-mail to the immediate left. Following the arrow 27-3 allows e-mails to be read. The emails are already opened. Moving the device diagonally upwards to the right 27-3 the first e-mail can be read. Moving the device along the arrow 27-4, the user arrives at the second e-mail. Continuing to move the device along the direction 27-5, the 3^(rd) email can be read. By sliding a finger along the touch screen (changing from a moving device with a stationary background to the finger slide on the display screen moving the background) in the direction of the arrow 27-6, the user arrives at the 4^(th) email, and so on. The sequencing of how the e-mails are located is very much dependent on the user's preference.

FIG. 28 illustrates the one possible communication network between a social group comprising users 5-7 a, 5-7 b, 5-7 c and 5-7 d physically located in a coffee shop, for instance. User 5-7 c communicates to the other three users via links: 28-1, 28-2 and 28-3. This link can use NFC (Near Field Communication) such as Bluetooth or WiFi. The user 5-7 c and the other three users then decide how to share information. In one case, the other users can establish a similar relative network simultaneously, if desired. User 5-7 c is also shown to establish a link 28-4 to the cloud. All users have access to the Internet although that has not been illustrated. But each user can communicate with the other user although only one user is illustrated to perform various functions on the composite website. The cloud interfaces to several servers 28-8, 28-9 and 28-10 via links 28-5, 28-6 and 28-7, respectively.

Finally, it is understood that the above description are only illustrative of the principle of the current invention. Various alterations, improvements, and modifications will occur and are intended to be suggested hereby, and are within the spirit and scope of the invention. This invention may, however, be embodied in many different forms and should not be construed as limited to the embodiments set forth herein. Rather, these embodiments are provided so that the disclosure will be thorough and complete, and will fully convey the scope of the invention to those skilled in the arts. It is understood that the various embodiments of the invention, although different, are not mutually exclusive. The microprocessor is a device that is used to calculate the distance that the portable device moves and to interact with the database in the memory to provide the data corresponding to the new portion of the map associated with the distance change. The data from the memory is translated into display data by the processor. The microprocessor could also be a DSP or video processor. In accordance with these principles, those skilled in the art may devise numerous modifications without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. The three dimensional space can contain detailed maps, webpages, pictures, text, objects, solids, floor plans, cities, underground pipelines, etc. 

What is claimed is:
 1. A portable unit comprising: a plurality of webpages each bounded on all sides by edges; each webpage shares at least one common edge with one abutting webpage; said plurality of abutting webpages form a composite webpage; and a portion or all of said composite webpage displayed on a display screen.
 2. The portable unit of claim 1, wherein said plurality of webpages is selected from the group consisting of social friends, email nomenclature, favorite websites and preferred sub-sites of a favorite website.
 3. The portable unit of claim 1, further comprising: a cursor when within said edge bounded webpage activates a connection link to a corresponding website.
 4. The portable unit of claim 3, further comprising: a memory and corresponding webpage are updated with contents from said corresponding website.
 5. The portable unit of claim 4, whereby said memory is updated when a last website update time is greater than a last memory webpage update time.
 6. The portable unit of claim 4, further comprising: an RF module to access an external database to supply said memory with data.
 7. The portable unit of claim 1, further comprising: an inertial guidance system providing a movement data that maintains said composite webpage stationary with regard to moving portable unit.
 8. A portable unit comprising: a plurality of webpages each bounded on all sides by edges; each webpage shares at least one common edge with one abutting webpage; said plurality of abutting webpages form a composite webpage; a portion or all of said composite webpage displayed on a display screen, and every webpage has the same height dimension and same width dimension.
 9. The portable unit of claim 8, further comprising: a scroll bar to scroll a contents of the webpage
 10. The portable unit of claim 8, further comprising: said webpages are layered in a three dimensional space.
 11. The portable unit of claim 8, further comprising: an inertial guidance system providing a movement data that maintains said composite webpage stationary with regard to a moving portable unit.
 12. The portable unit of claim 8, wherein said plurality of webpages is selected from the group consisting of social friends, email nomenclature, favorite websites and preferred sub-sites of a favorite website.
 13. The portable unit of claim 8, further comprising: a cursor when within said edge bounded webpage activates a connection link to a corresponding website.
 14. The portable unit of claim 13, further comprising: a memory and corresponding webpage are updated with contents from said corresponding website.
 15. The portable unit of claim 14, whereby said memory is updated when a last website update time is greater than a last memory webpage update time.
 16. A method of updating a memory of a composite webpage comprising the steps of: determining a website webpage update time of a webpage selected from said composite webpage; determining a memory webpage update time of said webpage from said composite webpage; comparing said website webpage update time and said memory webpage update time; updating memory webpage with website webpage if comparison is positive; and moving to another webpage selected from said composite webpage, thereby updating said memory of said composite webpage.
 17. The process of claim 16, whereby said webpage and said another webpage are selected from a plurality of webpages; and said plurality of webpages is selected from the group consisting of social friends, email nomenclature, favorite websites and preferred sub-sites of a favorite website.
 18. The process of claim 16, whereby said memory is local to a computer.
 19. The process of claim 18, whereby said computer is a notebook computer or a portable unit.
 20. The process of claim 19, whereby said computer contains an RF module to access an external database to supply said memory with data. 